Treffer: Well-Being of Public Servants Under Pressure: The Roles of Job Demands and Personality Traits in the Health-Impairment Process: The Roles of Job Demands and Personality Traits in the Health-Impairment Process

Title:
Well-Being of Public Servants Under Pressure: The Roles of Job Demands and Personality Traits in the Health-Impairment Process: The Roles of Job Demands and Personality Traits in the Health-Impairment Process
Contributors:
Strategisch HRM, UU LEG Research USG Public Matters
Source:
Review of Public Personnel Administration. 43:159-184
Publisher Information:
SAGE Publications, 2021.
Publication Year:
2021
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift Article
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
ISSN:
1552-759X
0734-371X
DOI:
10.1177/0734371x211052674
Rights:
CC BY
Accession Number:
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a6f8ebb71e93f0c84afb8ca8434b25b
Database:
OpenAIRE

Weitere Informationen

The health-impairment process from job demands to lower well-being among public servants is still understudied. This article therefore uses the Job Demands-Resources model and answers the following question: What is the relationship between sector-specific job demands and public servants’ work-related well-being, and which of the Big Five personality traits ensure that either the hindering effect of these demands is lowered or the challenging effect enlarged? Four public sector specific demands are studied including organizational restructurings, technological innovations, aggression from citizens, and integrity pressure. The analysis of two representative subsamples of the Dutch public sector show that all job demands negatively relate to well-being. Organizational restructurings is the strongest hindering job demand, while technological innovations is the least hindering demand. Moreover, some personality traits turned out to be demands instead of resources, opening new doors for future research in the health-impairment process of public servants.